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tv   CNNI Simulcast  CNN  January 5, 2015 10:00pm-11:01pm PST

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thanks for staying with us everybody. you're watching cnn. we'd like to welcome our viewers in the united states and all around the world. >> ahead this hour we are live in surabaya with new details about the search for airasia flight 8501. people in germany come out to protest a growing right wing movement. and cnn takes you to the front lines, where rebels are battling for control of syria as biggest city. and later, buckingham palace continues to deny sex claims against prince andrew. a well-known attorney is also speaking out. >> first time my name was mentioned was a week ago, just
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made up out of whole cloth, completely totally. >> thanks for joining us, everyone. and with improved weather divers are back in the water, looking for any traces of airasia flight 8501. search teams are combing a 45,000 square kilometer area in the java sea. >> officials have displayed seats and other debris pulled out of that crash zone but so far they've not found the plane's main body or the flight data recorders, and so far today they have not found any more bodies though officials have identified six more of the bodies which were already found. 19 have been identified in total. >> let's go to cnn's anna coren joining us live from the crisis center in surabaya indonesia. it is just after 1:00 in the afternoon there. and despite the weather
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improving, there hasn't been much progress has there? >> reporter: yeah not much progress at all unfortunately, rosemary. we had been told by officials that drivers were in the water as of 6:00 this morning. we've now heard that those divers did not go in the water, that they are on stand by waiting for conditions to improve, while there might be a break in the weather, we have to remember there are still high seas and waves may not be as big as they have been for the last eight, nine days, it is still rough. and on top of that you have this muddy ocean floor, which is just pushing up a lot of silt. so visibility is not good for those divers. so communications unfortunately, not as good as what we would like. trying to get the latest on where they are with the search site but what we know is that there are aircraft flying over the search zone. there are vessels out on the water, that there are divers
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still on stand by looking for that wreckage. now we know that there have been large objects spotted by sonar over the last few days. late yesterday they spotted another object, there was speculation that that was perhaps the plane's tail. and that is where they find the black boxes. it is mere speculation. we don't know for sure as to what that object is. so as soon as we have any information, we'll obviously bring that to our viewers. but you can imagine, they are racing against the clock to find that wreckage. the reason being is that the bodies are deteriorating. they're decomposing in these warm tropical waters. so we know 37 have been found, have been recovered, of which 19 have been identified. another six identified this morning. we're still waiting for those names, rosemary but as soon as the families find out, the media will then be informed. >> and anna we mentioned at the
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start there that you're at a crisis center there in surabaya. talk to us about how family members are coping as they await news on their lost loved ones. >> reporter: well as you can imagine, it's an excruciating period in their lives. all they want is news that their loved ones have been recovered. we spent the morning with the head of the disaster victims identification unit dr. anton kes lawny, he is certainly not immune to disasters. this is a country that saw the bali bombings and 200,000 indonesiaens were killed during the tsunami. and then the latest plane crash. so his unit with the help of an international team are doing what they can to identify these victims as quickly as they can.
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you know i mention the deterioration of the bodies. he says that the bodies that have been brought to the hospital here in surabaya have been found in tact. he said but as the time goes by the bodies will brake up, and they'll have been looking at body parts. obviously the skin is no longer usable. they would have done fingerprints and that gives a dna sample almost immediately. they can find out the i.d. within minutes. once that goes they then have to resort to teeth and bone and as you can imagine, that is a much longer process. but for these families they just want to know that their loved ones have been found so that they can then give them a proper burial. >> it is certainly a grim task ahead, anna coren joining us at the crisis center. we head to germany where an anti-muslim movement is growing and thousands of proponents are responding with counter demonstrations. >> yeah.
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about 18,000 supporters of the group patriotic europeans against the islamization of the west jammed the streets of dresden on monday. chancellor angela merkle has condemned the group saying they have prejudice and even hatred in their hearts. >> and we report on the increasingly vocal opposition. >> reporter: as germany continues to grapple with the wave of anti-islam demos, more and more people are taking to the streets saying "not in our name". thousands went to the streets to demonstrate for what they say should be a multi-cultural and tolerant germany open to all religions. >> in my opinion, what makes berlin berlin is its variety. so that's what we want to stand up for. >> tolerance. for multi culture. important to be here. >> i think it's just very sad that it seems to be fashionable
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for some people nowadays to hate foreigners. that's not the way things should be like. >> reporter: in the city of cologne, the catholic church shut off the lights of the of cathedral, saying that anybody who calls themselves a christian should have nothing to do with the anti-islam movement. it is one that people are having a hard time coping with. certainly the demonstrations have been drawing very large crowds of people who say that they fear a wave of immigrants coming from muslim countries and also fear rad skal islamists here in germany, however, there's very little evidence to support the fact that that is actually a real threat. in fact the muslim population in the main city where these demonstrations are taking place in dresden is only about 0.1%. cnn, berlin. and germany's interior ministry has spoken about these anti-muslim groups, and they say
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these groups are raising issues that must be addressed. >> a lot of those who o are there on the street they have questions. they ask, is there an end of asylum seekers? how dangerous is the islam for our society? what about the fight against isis. can this be successful? and these questions have to be faced, has to be answered. but not as a answern answer but because we on our own we want to answer these questions. >> and immigration has been a subject of tense debate. a man hunt is under way in new york after two police officers were shot in the bronx neighborhood.
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>> police say both officers are expected to survive. they were looking for a robbery suspect, and they tried to pull over a car when the shooting happened. police are looking for at least two suspects. they say one of them may have been shot as well. this comes just a few weeks after two police officers in the nypd were shot to death in their patrol car in brooklyn apparently a revenge attack for black deaths at the hands of police. an avalanche in austria killed two prospects from the u.s. ski team. ronnie berlack and bryce astle were training. the others managed to ski out of the slide. at the time, there was a level three avalanche risk on the mountain. it's unclear if they were wearing avalanche gear. jordan's prince ali hussain says he will seek the fifa presidency this year. the current leader announced his
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plans in a statement, he wrote i believe it is time to shift the focus away from administrative controversy. and they deserve a service organization and a model of ethics, transparency and good governance. plus the headlines should be about football the beautiful sport, not about fifa. the prince is the third son of the late yingking hussain of jordan. and a short break, but when we come back, global markets are heading down and oil prices falling. plus we are following the trial of the accused boston marathon bomber as the long process of selecting a jury gets under way. when heartburn comes creeping up on you... fight back with relief so smooth... ...it's fast. tums smoothies starts dissolving the instant it touches your tongue ...and neutralizes stomach acid at the source. ♪ tum, tum tum tum...♪ smoothies! only from tums.
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plunging oil prices a sluggish global economy and maybe some profit taking all combining for a big downturn in the world's financial markets. here's a look at monday's close, down almost 2%. >> energy stocks took the biggest hit. some analysts believe the selloff could be the start of a market correction after last year's bull market. >> and the markets are well into their second day showing big drops. jim, it looks like asia is following wall street.
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>> markets aren't rational they're reactive. the nikkei was down just about 3%. china not off as much as the nikkei but it isn't a surprise when we're coming into 2015 and people are really thinking hard about, are we in a deflationary period. are we going to see more stocks fall because we think 2015 might be real tough time for companies to make a profit. >> so, is this all about the falling price of oil? is it too much supply or demand just isn't strong enough? what's the balance here? >> when you see oil prices fall this fast as we saw toward the end of 2014 and coming into 2015 it does say that it's a lot of supply. we know that opec didn't cut back on its supply. we know the u.s. is putting a lot more oil out there. and so we the weak demand, i think comes later in 2015 if we do see the economy slowing, the u.s. obviously not slowing.
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in europe the euro zone slowing a great deal. you would sea the weak demand coming through, and that feeds into the future price of oil so it continues to fall. >> is there any indication of how much farther oil has to go before it hits bottom? >> i would never predict that john because i'd get it wrong. we've seen oil at $150. we've seen it below $30. it is very elastic and does bounce around a great deal. what we see most of the time is a tumbling or a spiking. so we see this roll. right now we're in a worrisome time in the world economy. so we're seeing it fall more and more and more, and people are predicting it's going to fall further, which is why there's such a worry that it could feed into the fears, especially here in new york. >> but shouldn't this be good news? people laughing all the way to the tank? petro is now so cheap.
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it's billions more in the pockets of american consumers, and that's more that they'll spend. >> that's true in the u.s. the percentage you would see in the u.s. and a lot of countries subsidize oil prices and gasoline prices and so it doesn't fall as much but certainly in the u.s. i just came back from there last week onhear everybody talking about gas prices. they're watching the prices at the pump fall and fall and fall. i think that could be because you have a strong economy. you see a lot of people planning on summer trips, spring trips. deflation deflationary prices here in europe is not a positive step at all. >> all i know is i filled up my suv for $50 yesterday. it's looking pretty good from
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here. well in boston, jury selection continues today in a trial that will likely bring back a lot of painful memories. 21 year old dzhokhar tsarnaev is facing 30 federal charges related to the boston marathon bombing. the trial itself is expected to begin january 26. cnn's chris welch has the details. >> reporter: for the next two days as jury selection continues, approximately 400 potential jurors a day will continue filling out questionnaires. a select few will return next week for direct questioning. they'll be narrowed down to a final jury of 12 plus six alternates. u.s. officials revealed today that a plea deal to avoid the death penalty was opposed by the justice department. so the trial and jury selection continues as planned. >> that means all 12 of those jurors and all six of those
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alternates have to make it clear that they would be open to the death penalty. not that they will in fact impose it. they'll get bounced off the jury if they say anything like that but that they'll follow the rules, all the criteria and that they would be open to it if he's convicted on any one of those 17 counts. >> reporter: tsarnaev is accused of teaming with his brother to detonate two bombs at the finish line of the boston marathon killing three people and injuring more than 260 others. he also faces charges for the death of an m.i.t. police officer killed while dzhokhar and his older brother tamerlin were on the run. the trial is expected to take several months. when arguments begin, defense attorneys are expected to characterize him as an impressionable teenager who was manipulated by his older brother. >> a lot of these discussions about was he impressionable or was he evil in and of himself
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really have nothing to do with guilt or innocence. it's going to have with whether he spends the rest of his life in jail or the death penalty. the state of florida has legalized same-section marriagex marriage. >> any response? >> no, your honor. >> i'm lifting the stay. [cheers and applause] >> that was the surprise reaction in court on monday after a judge lifted another stay. the judge's ruling allowed the same-sex marriages in miami to begin a day earlier than expected. those cheering couples rushed to tie the knot just moments later. florida is not the first state to do this. it is the 36th state to allow same-sex marriages. but it is a big decision. a short break now. plane crash survivors share
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their stories after a young girl walks away from a weekend crash that killed her family. kid: do you pay him? dad: of course. kid: how much? dad: i don't know exactly. kid: what if you're not happy? does he have to pay you back? dad: nope. kid: why not? dad: it doesn't work that way. kid: why not? vo: are you asking enough questions about the way your wealth is managed? wealth management at charles schwab i've smoked a lot and quit a lot but ended up nowhere. now...i use this. the nicoderm cq patch with unique extended release technology helps prevent the urge to smoke all day. i want this time to be my last time. that's why i choose nicoderm cq.
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and an early morning mode.
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and a partly sunny mode. and an outside...to clear inside mode. transitions ® signature ™ adaptive lenses ...are more responsive than ever. so why settle for a lens with just one mode? experience life well lit ® . upgrade your lenses to transitions ® signature ™ . receiving a transitions lenses certificate of authenticity is your only guarantee that you're getting the world's #1 recommended photochromic lens. ask for it and register your lenses online today. this is an amazing story. a 7-year-old girl back with family members after surviving a small plane crash in kentucky that killed her parents, sister and cousin. >> the story is gripping. it's also rare but there are others like her. jason carroll reports on what it's like to be a sole survivor.
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>> reporter: what lies behind this smile of this 7-year-old girl is the kind of courage seen in those well beyond her young years. that's what larry wilkins thought when sailor gutzler showed up on his front porch late friday night and told him an incredible story. >> she said my mom and dad are dead. we had a plane crash. >> reporter: gutzler and her family took off from key west florida. on board, her father who was piloting the twin-engine aircraft. on board, her mother and sister and cousin. the plane crashed in a wooded area in kentucky. sailor was the only survivor. how was she able to survive the crash and then endure hiking three quarters of a mile through dark cold woods without shoes or proper clothes is unknown. >> she was amazingly composed for a 7-year-old girl. >> reporter: there are others
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documented in the cnn film sole survivor. in 1987, cecelia was 4 years old when she was the sole survive of flight 255. 154 people were killed when the airline crashed in detroit, including her entire family. decades later, she still has scars and something more. >> i got this tattoo. this is a reminder of where i've come from. >> reporter: she credits luck for her survival. austin hatch believes a higher power may have helped him. >> i think god has had his hand on me. and i think there was a plan for my life. >> reporter: in 2003 when hatch was just 8 years old shall the small plane his father was piloting crashed killing his mother and siblings. hatch and his father survived. then tragically eight years later in 2011 hatch was in another crash. this time his father again the pilot, was killed as was his stepmother. hatch was the only survivor.
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his brain injury so bad he had to re-learn to walk and even talk. now just a few years after the second crash he's on a basketball scholarship at the university of michigan and scored his first career points last month. >> basketball has sort of has gave me something to shoot for. and it's been my goal you know from when i woke up in the coma. >> reporter: what they all have in common is not just a shared tragedy, but a will to survive. jason carroll, cnn, new york. >> extraordinary stories. >> especially that 7-year-old girl. all right, well terror edges rain in washington state set the stage for a frightening landslide caught on video. >> let's go to pedram jar herevaheri. we've got the landslides on the west coast and freezing for the rest of the country.
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>> the koidcold is not in place on the west coast fortunately. in recent days the amount of rain that has come down upwards of 7 inches. 6.5 inches or so in other arias. take a look at this video out of washington. pretty impressive scene. just a disastrous scenario when it comes to -- that's not the exact piece of video i had in mind. the one that brings the landslide down into homes this. is the end result of what is left in place. we know some 300 people evacuated. six of these landslides occurred over a 24-hour period because the torrential rainfall. and we have the olympic mountain range here on the western side of washington state and tremendous rain and snow across the higher elevations but notice a rain shadow. all that moisture is squeezed
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out. while on the east, in seattle, they've been dry. look at seattle, well-known for rainfall. they drop in right in the doughnut there with very little to no rainfall in that time period with the moisture that was coming in from the west. but massive area of high pressure. in fact one of the highest areas of pressure. going to cause the air to suppress any weather development in the coming days. unfortunately, it ushers in arctic air. the temperatures in chicago as such, below freezing below zero i should say, over the next couple days. this isn't celsius, so you drop it down to 17 below for a high temperature later on in the week. wind chills also very cold over the next couple days as you head into chicago, 15 to 20 below zero. it gets colder near wednesday morning, near 30 below.
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welcome back to our viewers in the united states and all around the world. i'm rosemary church. >> and i'm john vause. let's check the headlines. officials in indonesia have identified six more bodies pulled from the java sea, that makes a total of 19 bodies identified so far. 162 people were on the plane when it went down just over a week ago. divers had to call off their search again today due to bad weather. police in new york city are searching for two suspects after two police officers were shot in the bronx. both officers are expected to survive. police say they were called to a
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store robbery and were trying to pull a car over when the nypd officers were shot. one of the suspects may also have been shot. jordan's prince ali bin hussain says he will seek the fifa presidency this year. the current president announced his plans in a statement and wrote i believe it is time to shift the focus away from administrative controversy and back to the sport. the prince is the third son of the late king hussain of jordan. civilians fleeing syria's civil war will now need a visa to enter neighboring lebanon. for months beirut has been warning it can no longer handle the massive influx of syrian refugees. more than a million have registered in lebanon, but it's believed that many more have
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entered without registering. the fear now is that people running for safety will be trapped in the war zone and the u.n. is deeply concerned. >> our concern is that there's no mention of refugees in these new regulations. the government has made public statements the last few days including the minister of social affairs, that the previous practice of allowing extremely vulnerable people will continue. unacr is simply asking that we get something official in writing that will that will confirm that. and we'd like some information on exactly how the procedure will be carried out, to ensure the most vulnerable people can still get in. >> and the new rules come as extreme weather threatens. parts of lebanon are expecting high winds and snow this week. and many refugees have only flimsy unheated tents to protect them. the result of the influx of
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refugees is that about a fifth of lebanon's population is now syrian and that's having a profound impact on its economy. under new regulations syrians will have to apply for visa-like permissions to cross the border. there are six categories. student, medical, transit, tourists or short stay. those as tourists must provide a hotel reservation and i.d. and have at least $1,000. kurdish fighters in syria report gains in kobani as they battle for control of that city. a human rights group says kurds now control 80% of kobani located not far from the turkish border. 14 isis militants died on monday as kurds retook the city's main square. they've been backed by u.s.-led air strikes in the region. the observatory for human rights says more than 6500 people were killed in government attacks in syria last year.
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half of them died in aleppo where fighting is still raging. cnn has obtained exclusive footage from the front lines for a series of reports. in the first, nick payton walsh shows us what could become a critical battle. >> reporter: rebels have had a brutal fight for years now. but it is now reaching a strategic moment as rebels are desperately trying to hold onto one vital excess road they have around aleppo. the regime definitely wants to take t rebels claim they have the upper hand. but a brazilian photo journalist got access last year to those vital front lines. in the abandoned mansions of syria's old elite, a vital battle for its biggest city is reaching a peak.
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this is just outside aleppo. this village, key to the last remaining supply line for rebels into the city. if the regime takes this tens of thousands of civilians in rebel areas will be besieged. our cameraman gave the regime positions. now they begin with a surprise attack. across open ground these men are young, breathless but in this war's carnage, that amounts to experience. so many do not last long. [ speaking in foreign language ] >> reporter: these are the farms that the regime army took the commander says and they took it because arab countries let us down by not giving us weapons. iran is supporting bashar's
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army. this is a mad dash towards a better equipped regime. and then positions by a dirt wall. shoot now, guys he says. [ gunfire ] it looks like the 23-millimeter machine guns will shoot at us now, they laugh. and then pull back. reminding each other to conserve ammunition. even three years in they still fight with makeshift or light weapons. [ speaking in foreign language ] >> reporter: here we only have kalashnikovs or grenades, he says light weapons, against the
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weapons of mass destruction the regime has. a cry of the faithful amid the loneliest, most vital fight. they take gabriel to another front line near the airport, another regime stronghold in aleppo. >> the army built that. >> it's very near. >> 50 meters. >> here from this point 50. and another point, there, 15. >> reporter: this is their day to day existence. cat and mouse amid the rubble of their old world. a stalemate that has swallowed syria's commercial hub for two
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years now. they fire at the regime. that crack is them returning fire with heavier weapons. we're shown the firing position for which they can see their enemy. our guide has moved back. ah he says i'm hit. the bullet explode near my face. no i'm covered in fragments. the wounds are superficial, though. that first front line you saw is so key, because if the regime do manage to take it then potentially, 65,000 families that's about 300,000 people risk being besieged by the syrian government army soldiers. now aid workers are warning of a humanitarian catastrophe if that does happen.
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already inside aleppo this winter they're burning trees, any wood they can find growing naturally there for fuel. they're running short of food. they're having problem getting clean drinking water. many are worried about the level of warmth children can have inside the shelf that city. if they're besieged things will get an awful lot worse. >> and you can find more of nick's reporting at cnn.com. and while are you there, you can see it's a little different. it's been redesigned to find the stories and videos which you want. check it out at any time at cnn.com. a short break now, but coming up vehement denials of sex accusations. in the lining of the esophagus. there is risk of bone fracture and low magnesium levels. side effects may include headache abdominal pain and diarrhea. if you have persistent diarrhea, contact your doctor right away.
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one of the grand jury members from the michael brown shooting case in ferguson missouri is suing the prosecutor. >> the american civil liberties union says the unnamed juror wants the right to speak about the grand jury specious. state law prohibits jurors from speaking and requires secrecy about grand jury deliberations. >> the grand jury decided not to indict officer wilson in the shooting death of michael brown last august. the new york mayor is
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calling the actions of some officers disrespectful. >> he says that those who turned their backs on him during the funerals showed disrespect to the mourning families and the people of new york. >> those individuals who took certain actions these last week or last two weeks, really they why disrespectful to the families involved. that's the bottom line. they were disrespectful to the families who had lost their loved one. and i can't understand why anyone would do such a thing in a context like that. >> mayor de blasio and many police officers have been at odds since he remained devout about relations with black americans. the charges stem from a lawsuit against a u.s. billionaire and the denials are emphatic. >> reporter: when the scandal at
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the palace it usually goes quiet. not this time though. not one, but an unprecedented four statements issued in response to a lawsuit alleging prince andrew had sex with an underage girl several times. in tryhree years from 1999 to 2002. one even went so far as specifically naming his accuser, saying it emphatically denied that the duke had any sexual relationship with roberts. roberts, referred to as jane doe three alleges that she was kept as a sex slave for three years by the prince's former friend convicted sex offender jeffrey epstein. during this time roberts claimed she was forced to have sexual relations with the prince when she was a minor. in london new york and on epstein's private island in the
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u.s. virgin island and in an orgy with numerous underage girls. she was told to give the prince whatever he wanted and required and report back to him on the details. the prince had come under harsh criticism for his friendship with epstein back in 2011. he later resigned as an ambassador to british trade. according to court documents, epstein lent her to powerful figures for sex, including alan dershowitz dershowitz. cnn doesn't normally name victims of sexual abuse. but reacting to the denials, roberts insist she will pursue all available recourse saying these types of attacks are exactly the reason sexual abuse
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victims usually remain silent. whatever the truth, this alleged sex scandal threatens the reputation not just of the prince but the monarchy. the palace was quick to dismiss a suggestion that roberts had met the queen, saying there was no record of it. cnn. >> prominent u.s. defense attorney. >> total and complete lines. there are flight manifests. they will prove i was never on any private airplane with any young women. she said bill clinton was at an orgy at jeffrey epstein's island. the records will show that bill clinton never set foot on the island. she has a criminal record for
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theft and stealing. nobody should believe a word she says about anybody or anything. >> have you ever met her? >> no. don't know her. >> jane doe number three. so you don't have any memory any recollection of having met this young lady? >> i have a superb memory. i have a memory of not having met her. i don't have just a memory of not having -- i did not meet her. i did not -- and believe me i remember everybody i've ever had sex with. i don't, not that old that i would forget. i did not have any sexual contact, whatsoever under any circumstances. she made the whole thing up out of whole cloth. i can prove it by flight records. i can prove it by my travel records, and if the lawyers, these sleazy, unprofessional unethical lawyers, paul casell
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and brad edwards, if they had just done an hour of research and work they would have seen that she is lying through her teeth. >> and dershowitz says his legal team is preparing disbarment and disciplinary papers against roberts' attorneys. coming up the chris christie hug that was embraced by some mocked by others. thinking about what you want to do with your money? daughter: looking at options. what do you guys pay in fees? dad: i don't know exactly. daughter: if you're not happy do they have to pay you back? dad: it doesn't really work that way. daughter: you sure? vo: are you asking enough questions about the way your wealth is managed? wealth management at charles schwab. curling up in bed with a favorite book is nice. but i think women would rather curl up with their favorite man. but here's the thing: about half of men over 40 have some degree of erectile dysfunction.
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well as we told you earlier, a strong winter storm
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is moving across parts of the eastern mediterranean and battering the millions displaced in the region. >> meteorologist pedram javaheri joins us now. >> the most recent influx of people that were displaced here in the past few months unfortunately were displaced in the month of september, which is the end of the summer season and a lot of people literally running for their lives in their summer attire. this is not going to be a good recipe set up here. rainfall set up over turkey. a lot of cities have seen major delays when it comes to airports. we've had recent rainfall and some of these shelters not going to withstand much when it comes to the powerful winds forecast 60 70 kilometers per hour. heavy rainfall. and the temperatures just cold enough to stay in the form of rain, not snow. so you kind of take a look at the mess that is left in place here again, going to be a rough
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few days that set out of fact that some of these temperatures where some 2.5 million are displaced out of syria, you go down from 12 degrees to 6 degrees, eventually to 4 degrees celsius on thursday. so temperatures in the 30s and 40s fahrenheit. and even in amman jordan temperatures dropping down to 5 degrees celsius. models indicating pretty significant band of snowshowers. much of that stays on into turkey. a lot of people displaced in turkey as well well over a million in that area. so the cold temperatures are going to be impacting this region as well. and the models indicating anywhere from 10 to 15 centimeters. delays going to be a probability here. blizzard-like conditions in
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ankara. istanbul moscow and bay route also will will see delays. we had a low temperature in the last 24 hours down to minus 5 degrees celsius. so very cold weather for this time of year across this portion of the world. >> 70 days until spring. >> and counting. >> and counting. >> yes. >> look at you, your little research unless you're smarter than i think, which is probably right. >> thank you. okay. so there are hugs that tug at the heartstrings. and then there are awkward hugs. >> we've all had a few of those in our day. governor chris christie was caught on camera in a group hug at a football game. some embraced that hug. others not so kind. jeanne moos has more. >> reporter: it was the hug some fans couldn't wrap their heads around let alone their arms.
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the governor of new jersey in seventh heaven at dallas cowboys win. not his home team giants or jets. the cowboys. as governor christie told wfan. >> i don't need advice on how to root for the cowboys. >> reporter: first he tried to high-five jerry jones. jones was distracted by his son and the governor ended up in a group hug. vines sprouted on the web as it was dubbed goofy, weird. someone tweeted you can't un-see a chris christie jump hug. another compared him to kool-aid man. governor christie says he's worn the sweater five times, and each time the team won. good luck on that presidential thing. this is the projected 2016 electoral map, someone tweeted in the wake of the hug. >> you think we can carry texas now if we're running for
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president. >> we want to take our chances. >> reporter: there were even bad imitations. >> we reenact the chris christie jerry jones hug. boys? >> reporter: there was political analysis. >> his problem with aggressive man hugs. >> reporter: the defenders found it cool to see him having a good time letting loose. hugging can be hazardous to your dignity, i mean who hasn't gotten tangled up in an awkward hug? for instance president obama back slapping his departing press secretary. even more fraught with danger than hugs are kiss. bill clinton found his lips left in limbo as hillary turned on barack obama. at least if you listen to the marvin gaye sound trick you'd think he was about ♪ let's get it on ♪
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>> reporter: cnn, jeanne moos. >> someone's always watching right? >> thank you for watching. i'm john vause. >> and i'm rosemary church. you're watching cnn. the world is filled with air. but for people with copd sometimes breathing air can be difficult. if you have copd, ask your doctor about once-daily anoro ellipta. it helps people with copd breathe better for a full 24hours. anoro ellipta is the first fda-approved product containing two long-acting bronchodilators in one inhaler. anoro is not for asthma. anoro contains a type of medicine that increases risk of death in people with asthma. it is not known if this risk is increased in copd. anoro won't replace rescue inhalers for sudden copd symptoms and should not be used more than once a day. tell your doctor if you have a heart condition, or high blood pressure. tell your doctor if you have glaucoma, prostate or bladder problems, or problems passing urine as anoro may make these problems worse.
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call your doctor right away if you have worsened breathing chest pain, swelling of your mouth or tongue, problems urinating or eye problems including vision changes or eye pain while taking anoro. nothing can reverse copd. the world is filled with air and anoro is helping people with copd breath air better. get your first prescription free at anoro.com.
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why settle for a lens with just one mode? experience life well lit ®. speak with your eyecare professional to... ...upgrade your lenses to transitions ® signature ™ . [prof. burke] it's easy to buy insurance and forget about it. but the more you learn about your coverage, the more gaps you might find. like how you thought you were covered for this. [boy] check it out,mom! [prof. burke]when you're really only covered for this. or how you figured you were covered for this. when you're actually paying for this. you might be surprised at what's hiding in your coverage. talk to farmers and get smarter about your insurance. ♪ we are farmers bum-pa-dum bum-bum-bum-bum ♪♪ hey, there earn errol barnett. you'll be with you the next two hours.
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going down investors have growing doubts about the global economy. coming up another day of search being for airasia dangerous temperatures sweep across the u.s. and bring heavy sleet and windchills almost 30 degrees below zero. plus this. >> she is a lawyer? how does a lawyer rely on the statement of a woman who is a serial perjurer. >> a prominent u.s. attorney lashes out after he is caught up in a sexual abuse scandal that could reach to buckingham palace. interesting stories to get to. let's begin with the growing turmoil at this hour in financial markets. plunging oil prices. this debuilt of the euro zone and maybe some profit taking